Wisconsin Irregularities and Illegalities
POTENTIAL ILLEGAL VOTES
553
K+
No Data Found
Double Voters: In-State
234
Wisconsin
Indefinitely confined voter abuse
216
K
Wisconsin
Illegal Ballot Harvesting
17
K+
Wisconsin
Voter machine irregularities (fake/manufactured ballots and spikes)
143
K+
Wisconsin
Out-of-state voters who voted in-state
6
K+
Wisconsin
Absentee ballots cast without statutorily required application
170
K+
Wisconsin
Sources
https://baselessaudit.com/sources/navarro-the-navarro-report-vol-i-ii-iii-feb-2-2021/
Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Share on telegram
Telegram
Share on email
Email Wisconsin. 2020. Transparency Review. Report Summary
Fulton County. Georgia. Michigan. Nevada. Pennsylvania. Wisconsin. 2020. Transparency Review. Report File
Office of State Representative Timothy Ramthun59th Assembly District
Wisconsin. 2020. Independent Audit. Report File
The Office of the Special Counsel files this Investigative Report on Wisconsin’s administration of the 2020 elections as a first step to begin restoring faith in America’s elections. This effort is undertaken because Americans’ faith in its election system was shaken by events both before and after the November 2020 Presidential election.
Wisconsin. 2020. Independent Audit. Report File
Chad Armstrong, a convicted felon on probation, voted in the 2018 election despite being ineligible. He was charged with felony election fraud but pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor. He was sentenced to five days in jail. Wisconsin. 2020. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Peggy West, a former Milwaukee county supervisor, submitted false signatures on a petition to place her on the ballot for the spring 2018 election. According to the complaint filed against her, West forged the signatures of multiple residents within her district, and used a third party to collect other signatures despite the legal requirement that she collect them herself. She later falsely attested to have done so. West pleaded guilty to a charge of election fraud, and was sentenced to two years of probation and ordered to pay a $2,500 fine. Wisconsin. 2018. Ballot Petition Fraud. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
The Wisconsin Elections Commission issued a report to the Wisconsin Legislature in March 2017, detailing over 60 instances of 17-year-olds illegally voting in the 2016 primary election. It is suspected that many wrongly believed they could cast ballots if they turned 18 ahead of the November general election. Wisconsin. 2017. Ineligible Voting. Official Finding. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Troy Schiller pleaded guilty to voting twice in the 2016 primary election, once in his hometown of Dexter, and once in nearby Pittsville. He was sentenced to 30 days’ incarceration and was fined $500. Wisconsin. 2017. Duplicate Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Mark Fischer pleaded guilty to election fraud after voting in the 2016 presidential primary and general election despite being on probation for a felony drunken driving offense – his fifth or sixth offense of this nature. Circuit Judge Ramona Gonzalez sentenced Fisher to pay a $1,158 fine. Wisconsin. 2017. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Jessica Steinke, of Cleveland, pleaded no contest to charges that she voted in the 2016 election despite being a convicted felon and therefore ineligible. She had been convicted in 2014 of bail jumping. Steinke was sentenced to 80 hours of community service, 18 months of probation, and ordered to attend counseling. Wisconsin. 2017. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Robert Monroe, identified by prosecutors as the worst multiple-voter in state history, pleaded no contest to charges that he voted more than once in 2011 and 2012. Monroe’s record was extensive: he voted twice in the April 2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court election, twice in the 2011 recall election of state Senator Alberta Darling, and five times in Gov. Scott Walker’s recall election. He also cast an illegal ballot in the August 2012 primary and voted twice in the 2012 general election. On four of the counts, Monroe received a suspended three-year prison sentence, and will serve up to a year in jail. He also received five years’ probation, and was ordered to complete 300 hours of community service and pay a $5,000 fine. Wisconsin. 2016. Duplicate Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Nebi Ademi, 63, a native of Macedonia who resides in Chippewa Falls, successfully cast a ballot in the April 2016 primary election, despite his status as a non-citizen. Ademi filled out a same-day registration, leaving blank the question about his citizenship. District Attorney Steve Gibbs noted that poll workers “should have caught this” and recommended, based on his determination that Ademi had not deliberately broken the law, that the charges against him be changed from election fraud to disorderly conduct. Ademi pleaded no contest. He was ordered to pay $443 in court costs. Wisconsin. 2016. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Valerie Moran, of Merrimac, pleaded no contest to a charge of illegal voting in the 2014 general election. Moran, a convicted felon, voted despite still being on probation and therefore ineligible to cast a ballot. She was sentenced to 20 days’ imprisonment. Wisconsin. 2015. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
John S. Rohde was charged with falsifying statements on voter registration forms after voting twice in the November 2014 election. Rohde cast ballots in the towns of Beaver Dam and Calamus, using the address of a woman who had a no-contact order against him. Rohde was, in fact, living with his sister in the town of Horicon, and claimed that because he had recently moved, he had gone to the wrong polling place, and, after voting there, then had proceeded to the correct one, where he voted again. Rohde was convicted in Dodge County Circuit Court by Judge Brian Pfitzinger and was ordered to pay court costs and serve 40 hours of community service. Wisconsin. 2015. Duplicate Voting. False Registrations. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Andrew R. Knox voted in the 2010 election despite his status as a convicted felon. On March 11, 2015, Knox pleaded guilty to misdemeanor falsification of voter registry information. Knox had to pay fines amounting to $379, but received no jail time. Wisconsin. 2015. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Marcie Malszycki, a legislative aide, pleaded guilty to charges that she voted in the wrong district in the 2010 election. That year, Malszycki voted in Onalaska, a town she temporarily resided in while doing campaign work, rather than Madison. A similar charge that she voted in the wrong district in 2008 was dismissed as part of the plea agreement. Malszycki was placed in a first-offenders program. Wisconsin. 2014. False Registrations. Diversion Program. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
During the 2012 presidential election, Todd Murray stopped on his way home from work and voted at a polling place in New Berlin. He then proceeded to travel to his normal polling location in West Allis and cast a second ballot. In a show of the importance of the principle of “one person, one vote” Murray was sentenced to 90 days in jail (with work release privileges) and 18 months of probation. Wisconsin. 2014. Duplicate Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Tate Hohnstein, of Grafton, pleaded guilty to charges of illegal voting. Hohnstein, a convicted felon, voted in Wisconsin’s June special election and the November 2012 presidential elections. Hohnstein was sentenced to six days’ imprisonment and was ordered to pay $1,173 in court assessments. Wisconsin. 2014. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Leonard K. Brown pleaded guilty in 2013 to five felony counts of illegally voting in West Milwaukee when he did not reside there. A jury then found him guilty in January of 2014 of deliberately voting twice in the 2012 presidential election. Brown voted in person on the day of the election and by absentee ballot in a different jurisdiction four days prior. Brown was sentenced to nine months in jail and a $1,750 DNA testing charge. Wisconsin. 2014. Duplicate Voting. False Registrations. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary
Richard Alverson pleaded guilty to voting as a felon in the 2012 presidential election. He was sentenced to 18 days in jail and fined $500. Wisconsin. 2013. Ineligible Voting. Criminal Conviction. Fraud Investigation. Report Summary